For research partners

Sida supports research in and by low-income countries to reduce poverty and build sustainable societies. Our partners are bilateral, regional and global research institutions and research-supporting organisations.

Research of relevance for poverty reduction

Sida supports research of relevance to poverty reduction and sustainable development. We assists in building research capacity and systems for research and research-driven innovation in low-income countries. The aim is to save lives and lay the foundation for every person’s right and opportunity to live a decent life.

Swedish research support has three objectives:

Looking for funding?

Are you a researcher or research organisation looking for funding? Please have a look at our list of calls and grants. Individual research projects can only get Sida support via the work of our partner organisations.

Free online resources

Sida supports several organisations that offer ample online training and other resources for researchers, science journalists and scentific journal editors.

Local ownership and systems approach

Local ownership is emphasised in all our research cooperation and research priorities are set by our partners.

Our systems approach implies that we support many features of the research system. Within a university, we support not only research training and research groups, but also other functions to create a productive research culture. Research capacity at universities is linked to research in regional and global organisations.

Global calls for researchers from low-income countries

We support research councils in low-income countries. We coordinate with other funders and mobilise resources for global research calls, promoting the participation of researchers from low-income countries. Some of our partnerships are Grand Challenges Africa, ESSENCE and AI4D.

Our objectives:

Building national research systems

Sida’s research cooperation aims to promote low-income countries’ intellectual autonomy, in order to reduce poverty and develop sustainable societies.

We currently have bilateral research cooperation with:

One or several public universities work in close cooperation with primarily Swedish universities. The purpose is to strengthen research capacity in partner countries and their ability to train new generations of researchers. The cooperation often includes support to national research policy development and strengthening national research councils.

In the “sandwich model”, PhD candidates spend part of their time at a Swedish university for courses, analysis and writing, and the other part in their home country for field work and building research capacity at their institution. Swedish supervisors collaborate with supervisors from the home university. Support is also provided to institutional functions, such as ICT and labs.

World-leading research and policy development

Sida strengthens research of high quality and of relevance to poverty reduction and sustainable development through our partnership with several regional and global research organisations and networks. The research spans a large number of areas, such as agriculture and fisheries, climate and environment, energy, infectious diseases that disproportionately affect the poor, water and sanitation, sexual and reproductive health and rights, economic policies, democracy and human rights. Some examples of our partners are CGIAR, EDCTP, icipe, icddr,b, AERC, TDR, CODESRIA, AfricaLics, ACSS and Shape-SEA. Several of them contribute with world-leading research and policy development and have activities to strengthen research capacity in low-income countries.

We also support science journalism, research communication and scholarly publication, through our partners SciDev.Net, INASP and AJOL.

Innovation can flourish with local innovation systems

Sida supports the development of research-driven innovation systems and clusters within the bilateral and regional cooperation programmes as well as research on innovation. Innovation is not only related to science and technology, but also include ideas, services and processes.

Sida’s support to innovation promotes the environment and conditions for innovation to take place and we have pioneered in assisting innovation systems building in low-income countries.

For sustainability, innovation systems need to be put in place, not just support to specific innovations. The structures and capacity have to be built locally and regionally. We have seen that large impact can be achieved when different stakeholders are involved at an early stage, including universities, businesses, the public sector and the civil society. All our innovation support is context-specific and based on strong local ownership.

Our method of work and examples are described in the position paper Support to innovation and innovation systems within the framework of Swedish research cooperation.

Updated: August 20, 2025